The haunting call of the male guinea worm searching for his
mate will soon be heard no more, thanks to Bill Gates and the World HealthOrganisation.
This most beautiful creature, the tiger of the parasite
world, is threatened with extinction. The
guinea worm presents one of the Nature’s most perfect adaptations. Baby worms swimming in lakes, ponds and
rivers are eaten by small water-borne animals, like water boatmen, which are
then ingested by humans who drink this water unpurified. The animal dies, and the worm larva is
released to perform a dance of love.
Surviving both the highly acidic stomach and the highly alkaline
intestines, and swimming blind, relying only on the instincts of its ancestors
and its sense of duty, the worm penetrates the intestinal walls and in the
darkness of the abdominal cavity sings to find its mate. After a night of bliss, his work done, the
male dies, and the female is left alone to fend for herself; she slowly
migrates down the trunk of the body, and then down a leg, and at the ankle
where there is little flesh, she feels the freshness and causes the skin to
itch. It itches so much that the
sufferer more often than not will bathe it in cool water, and this signals the
worm to puncture the skin and eject her brood into a local pond or river. Her babies will in turn be eaten and the
cycle will repeat; except that the UN has decreed a death sentence on the worm,
and it will follow smallpox and rinderpest and be the third race deliberately exterminated
by modern man. Unlike the other two, the
guinea worm is not fatal, and has been the subject of an eradication attempt
more because it is vulnerable than because it is dangerous.x
Tony Milne milnetony@hotmail.com
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